Showing posts with label Extortion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Extortion. Show all posts

Thursday, May 12, 2016

'Sextortion,' a new cyber crime, is common: study


Sextortion -- using nude photos of someone to press for even racier content or other goods -- is surprisingly common, a US think tank says in what it calls the first in-depth study of another danger lurking in cyberspace.

Most victims are minors, the predators are almost always men who prey on multiple targets, and almost all adult victims are women, it said. Most victims choose to stay anonymous, out of shame.

And while US law enforcement officials acknowledge the problem, no agency or advocacy group keeps data on it, said the Brookings Institution, which published the study on Wednesday.

Even the term 'sextortion' is not a real word, but rather slang that prosecutors use to refer to an offense that does not fit neatly into a single category.

Depending on where you are in America, it can be prosecuted as child pornography, stalking, extortion or hacking. But sextortion as a crime per se does not exist, the think tank said.

"Legally speaking, there's no such thing," the report states.

Sextortion can entail a hack into someone's computer to rob a sexy picture or video or take over a webcam, then the use of this content to extort victims for even more.

It is even more common for perpetrators to resort to social media to elicit a photograph from a victim, than use it to demand more.

The Brookings Institution said it studied 78 cases from recent years that met its definition of sextortion and many others that contained elements of it.

- A sad first -

Those 78 were prosecuted in 29 states and territories of the United States and three foreign jurisdictions.

"For the first time in the history of the world, the global connectivity of the Internet means that you don't have to be in the same country as someone to sexually menace that person," the study states.

Those cases involve at least 1,379 victims. But for a variety of reasons -- such as prosecutors not seeking out all victims of a given predator -- the true number of victims from those 78 cases could actually range from 3,000 to 6,500 or even more, the study said.

An accompanying report from the same think tank detailed how sentencing of people convicted in sextortion cases varies wildly because some are tried in federal court and some in state court.

One man accused of victimizing at least 22 young boys and tried in a state court got a prison sentence of a year. But another alleged to have had one victim faced trial in federal court and got 12 years, the study found.

The key to ending the disparity, it added, is for Congress to pass a federal sextortion law incorporating elements present in federal sexual abuse, extortion, child pornography, and abusive sexual contact statutes.

The first report on the offense itself also provided harrowing details of actual sextortion cases.

One involved a woman who opened an email from an unknown sender and found sexually explicit photos of herself, data about her job, husband and three kids, and a demand for a porno video of her.

"And if she did not send it within one day, he threatened to publish the images already in his possession, and 'let (her) family know about [her] dark side,'" the study said.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Friday, November 13, 2015

Miriam wants longer jail time for 'tanim-bala' culprits


MANILA - Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago believes raising penalties against persons who plant bullets or firearms will help deter airport security personnel from engaging in the alleged "tanim-bala" extortion scheme.

Santiago is set to file a bill seeking to amend the Comprehensive Firearms and Ammunition Regulation Act by increasing the penalty against planting evidence, if committed by a private individual, to reclusion temporal.

The amendment, if approved, means that a person found guilty of inserting, placing, or attaching a bullet, a firearm, or parts of either, with the intent of incriminating another, may be punished with imprisonment for 12 years and one day up to 20 years.

"The government must send a clear message to these airport syndicates that it will not tolerate these criminal activities and will prosecute those who plant evidence with as much zeal as it pursues those who smuggle firearms and ammunition," Santiago said in statement Friday.

At present, the penalty for planting evidence is prision mayor (imprisonment for six years and one day to 12 years), except when the person found guilty is a public official or employee, in which case, the penalty is reclusion perpetua (imprisonment for 20 years and one day to 40 years).

According to Santiago, even if proposed amendments to Republic Act No. 10591 decriminalize possession of not more than three bullets, the tanim-bala operations can still persist, simply by increasing the number of ammunition planted.

"The law must punish those who, in the guise of upholding peace and order, abuse the law to prey on the innocent, whether these offenders are public officers or private citizens," the senator said.

The Senate blue ribbon committee and committee on public services on Thursday started investigating the bullet-planting scheme which has victimized travelers, including overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) and foreigners, at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA).

Some of the victims, including OFW Gloria Ortinez and American missionary Lane Michael White were asked to recount their ordeal while airport officials were grilled over the controversy.

'Your son's life will be ruined': Stepmom recounts extortion vs American tourist

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, January 27, 2014

Cedric Lee has links to NBI?


MANILA - The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) will be impartial in its probe into the mauling of ABS-CBN talent Vhong Navarro, assured Justice Secretary Leila De Lima in the wake of reports Cedric Lee, the leader of the group that beat up Navarro, is well-connected, even with the NBI.

In a text message to ABS-CBN News, De Lima said she will look into Lee's reported links to "past and present" NBI officials.

"As in any probe that we undertake, I will make sure that the NBI's probe will be impartial and credible. I will also look into Cedric Lee's alleged connections to certain NBI officials, past or present," De Lima said.

The NBI has initiated an investigation into the incident and has subpoenaed Lee and Deniece Cornejo at 2pm, today, Monday, to its main office in Taft Ave., Manila.

Cornejo is the friend who Navarro visited in her condominium unit on Wednesday night, where the incident took place.

Cornejo and Lee's camp claims Navarro attempted to rape her, which led to the mauling incident.

Navarro, however, denies this, and claims Lee and company merely wanted to extort P1 million from him.

Another mauling incident allegedly involving Lee was reported in 2007, with athlete and TV personality David Bunevacz as the alleged victim.

Lee denied Bunevacz's allegations against him in a sworn statement executed with the NBI, reported entertainment website PEP.PH.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Vhong Navarro beaten black and blue


Exclusive photos show Vhong Navarro after he was allegedly tied up and attacked by a group of men inside a condominium unit in Fort Bonifacio, Taguig on Wednesday.

Navarro's manager, film director Chito Rono, said the comedian was invited by a female friend to visit her in her condominium unit.

Rono said Navarro was also threatened and was a victim of extortion.

He added that his ward is in bad condition.

The TV host and actor sent the photos to ABS-CBN News on Friday night.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com